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Inside R&R . . .
Arts: The year to come
Summer movies disappoint
Section B
Inside Sportswrap.
Bennett:
the personality
Section C
SPECIAL EDITION
The Chronicle
13th Year, N
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Wednesday, July 27, 1983
$200 million campaign
scheduled for Trinity
By LARRY KAPLOW
Duke is collecting advance gifts in
preparation for the Capital Campaign
for the Arts and Sciences, the most
ambitious fund rats ing drive in
University history. Officials tentatively
expect to raise S20Q million in
endowment mo
"It is the largest [fund drive] . . .
which is exchisL' ely for endowment and
exclusively for arts and sciences, that
any University currently has on, or that
any University has ever run," said Joel
Fleishman, director ofthe campaign.
The campaign should be announced
at Founder's Day ir, December and will
run for approximately three years.
Contributions and pledges are currently
being solicited in the organizational
stage of the drive. In accordance with
general fund-raising practices, the total
goal will be about three times the
amount pledged in these preliminary
surveys.
Fleishman said the efforts, which
began Ln January are' on schedule," for
a $200 million target. If this goal is
achieved the University endowment will
be increased by 35 to 40 percent.
The endowment principle is currently
about $175 million, from which Duke
draws about $9 to $10 million in annual
returns.
The first gift, a $500,000 grant from
the Charles A. Dana Foundation and
devoted to the Center for Health Policy
Reasearch and Education, has been
received and will promote research in
disease prevention. The center is part of
the Institute of Policy Sciences.
University President Terry Sanford
said the drive is meant to build
endowments for the library,
professorships, graduate scholarships,
and undergraduate scholorships. The
money will be divided into subheadings
of these catagories as it is collected.
"This campaign is unique first of all
because nothing counts except money
for endowment," said Sanford.
"We're not going to build any
buildings with the money and we're not
going to spend the money," said
Fleishman.
Fleishman said the drive was
conceived as a means of meeting a
growing difference between fixed
endowment income and escalating
costs.
He said the Duke Endowment, a
private foundation located in Charlotte
which gives money to several
universities, gives about $12 to $13
million annually to Duke. That money,
along with the University's own
See TRINITY on page 4
THE CHRONICLE
Duke to comply with new law
By KELLIE ALLEN
A new law that raises the drinking
age in North Carolina will go into
effect Oct. 1, and the University
administration says it plans to
comply with the law.
The law, part ofthe Safe Roads Act
ratified by the General Assembly on
June 3, changes the legal age from 18
to 19 for. the purchase and
consumption of beer and wine. The
age remains at 21 for liquor.
The administration and student
leaders ofthe Associated Students of
Duke University (ASDU), the
Panhellenic Council of sororities and
the Interfraternitv Council have held
informal meetings this summer to
begin discussions on what actions
will be taken to enforce the law.
Though officials have not come up
with any definite proposals yet, most
say they expect that students will
obey the law.
"Most all of our plans right now are
very tentative," said Suzanne
Wasiolek, dean for student life. "We'll
be calling together a number of
groups and committees to come up
with a definite proposal this fall. I can
assure that whatever proposal we
come up with, we will be intending to
enforce the law.
See DUKE on page S
Inside
News
Leonard Avery is sentenced to life in prison (page
3) ... A profile of Joel Fleishman, the busy man
planning the Capital Campaign (page 4) . . .
Ernestine Friedl. dean of Trinity College, answers
questions on the quality of Duke's curriculum,
professors, and students (page 6) . . . University
President Terry Sanford promises a Provost choice
by September (page 14).
Features
Former Duke undergraduates discuss the ups and
downs of Duke Medical School (page 9).
Unknown student in 'Playboy'
Weather
Mostly sunny through the weekend, with highs in
the mid- to upper-80s. Lows in the 60s. With the
exception of brief afternoon thunderstorms, no rain
in sight.
By JON SCHER
Although a spokesman for Playboy said that two
Duke students are featured in the magazine's
September "Girls of the ACC" pictorial, only one ofthe
women apparently is enrolled at the University.
Duke undergraduates Michele Nelson and Debra
Jean Richards are pictured in the issue, according to
Joanie Schwabe ofthe Playboy public relations office.
Nelson is an 18-year-old Trinity sophomore from
Wheaton. Md. But the University has no record of a
student named Debra Jean Richards in either the
previous or upcoming academic years.
Richards could be using a stage name, as did at least
one of the other models.
Schwabe said Nelson is clothed in the pictorial,
which will hit the newsstands Aug. 2. Richards was
photographed semi-nude. "The girls from your school
are very pretty, and the pictures are very modest,"
Schwabe said.
Nelson is one of two women who did not shuck their
clothes for the pictorial. "I couldn't do that," she told a
Raleigh newspaper.
Playboy photographer David Chan came to Duke
last spring to recruit women for the pictorial, the
Atlantic Coast Conference segment ofthe magazine's
continuing series spotlighting women from various
Division I football schools. Chan could not be reached
for comment.
Schwabe said a total of 19 women posed, including
four from N.C. State, three from North Carolina,
Clemson and GeorgiaTech, two from Virginia and one
each from Maryland and Wake Forest.
"Duke ladies were more conservative than the
others," she said, "maybe because it's in the Bible
Belt."
The operations manager at North Carolina News, a
Durham-based newspaper and magazine distribution
firm, said interest in the issue is high among retailers.
"We're increasing our allotment from 7,500 to 15,000
copies," said Bill Woodside. "It's just smart business
— we've had so many calls about it."
A representative of Duke University Stores reported
that the Bryan Center lobby shop and the East
See ACC on page 32

Inside R&R . . .
Arts: The year to come
Summer movies disappoint
Section B
Inside Sportswrap.
Bennett:
the personality
Section C
SPECIAL EDITION
The Chronicle
13th Year, N
Duke University, Durham, North Carolina
Wednesday, July 27, 1983
$200 million campaign
scheduled for Trinity
By LARRY KAPLOW
Duke is collecting advance gifts in
preparation for the Capital Campaign
for the Arts and Sciences, the most
ambitious fund rats ing drive in
University history. Officials tentatively
expect to raise S20Q million in
endowment mo
"It is the largest [fund drive] . . .
which is exchisL' ely for endowment and
exclusively for arts and sciences, that
any University currently has on, or that
any University has ever run," said Joel
Fleishman, director ofthe campaign.
The campaign should be announced
at Founder's Day ir, December and will
run for approximately three years.
Contributions and pledges are currently
being solicited in the organizational
stage of the drive. In accordance with
general fund-raising practices, the total
goal will be about three times the
amount pledged in these preliminary
surveys.
Fleishman said the efforts, which
began Ln January are' on schedule," for
a $200 million target. If this goal is
achieved the University endowment will
be increased by 35 to 40 percent.
The endowment principle is currently
about $175 million, from which Duke
draws about $9 to $10 million in annual
returns.
The first gift, a $500,000 grant from
the Charles A. Dana Foundation and
devoted to the Center for Health Policy
Reasearch and Education, has been
received and will promote research in
disease prevention. The center is part of
the Institute of Policy Sciences.
University President Terry Sanford
said the drive is meant to build
endowments for the library,
professorships, graduate scholarships,
and undergraduate scholorships. The
money will be divided into subheadings
of these catagories as it is collected.
"This campaign is unique first of all
because nothing counts except money
for endowment," said Sanford.
"We're not going to build any
buildings with the money and we're not
going to spend the money," said
Fleishman.
Fleishman said the drive was
conceived as a means of meeting a
growing difference between fixed
endowment income and escalating
costs.
He said the Duke Endowment, a
private foundation located in Charlotte
which gives money to several
universities, gives about $12 to $13
million annually to Duke. That money,
along with the University's own
See TRINITY on page 4
THE CHRONICLE
Duke to comply with new law
By KELLIE ALLEN
A new law that raises the drinking
age in North Carolina will go into
effect Oct. 1, and the University
administration says it plans to
comply with the law.
The law, part ofthe Safe Roads Act
ratified by the General Assembly on
June 3, changes the legal age from 18
to 19 for. the purchase and
consumption of beer and wine. The
age remains at 21 for liquor.
The administration and student
leaders ofthe Associated Students of
Duke University (ASDU), the
Panhellenic Council of sororities and
the Interfraternitv Council have held
informal meetings this summer to
begin discussions on what actions
will be taken to enforce the law.
Though officials have not come up
with any definite proposals yet, most
say they expect that students will
obey the law.
"Most all of our plans right now are
very tentative," said Suzanne
Wasiolek, dean for student life. "We'll
be calling together a number of
groups and committees to come up
with a definite proposal this fall. I can
assure that whatever proposal we
come up with, we will be intending to
enforce the law.
See DUKE on page S
Inside
News
Leonard Avery is sentenced to life in prison (page
3) ... A profile of Joel Fleishman, the busy man
planning the Capital Campaign (page 4) . . .
Ernestine Friedl. dean of Trinity College, answers
questions on the quality of Duke's curriculum,
professors, and students (page 6) . . . University
President Terry Sanford promises a Provost choice
by September (page 14).
Features
Former Duke undergraduates discuss the ups and
downs of Duke Medical School (page 9).
Unknown student in 'Playboy'
Weather
Mostly sunny through the weekend, with highs in
the mid- to upper-80s. Lows in the 60s. With the
exception of brief afternoon thunderstorms, no rain
in sight.
By JON SCHER
Although a spokesman for Playboy said that two
Duke students are featured in the magazine's
September "Girls of the ACC" pictorial, only one ofthe
women apparently is enrolled at the University.
Duke undergraduates Michele Nelson and Debra
Jean Richards are pictured in the issue, according to
Joanie Schwabe ofthe Playboy public relations office.
Nelson is an 18-year-old Trinity sophomore from
Wheaton. Md. But the University has no record of a
student named Debra Jean Richards in either the
previous or upcoming academic years.
Richards could be using a stage name, as did at least
one of the other models.
Schwabe said Nelson is clothed in the pictorial,
which will hit the newsstands Aug. 2. Richards was
photographed semi-nude. "The girls from your school
are very pretty, and the pictures are very modest,"
Schwabe said.
Nelson is one of two women who did not shuck their
clothes for the pictorial. "I couldn't do that," she told a
Raleigh newspaper.
Playboy photographer David Chan came to Duke
last spring to recruit women for the pictorial, the
Atlantic Coast Conference segment ofthe magazine's
continuing series spotlighting women from various
Division I football schools. Chan could not be reached
for comment.
Schwabe said a total of 19 women posed, including
four from N.C. State, three from North Carolina,
Clemson and GeorgiaTech, two from Virginia and one
each from Maryland and Wake Forest.
"Duke ladies were more conservative than the
others," she said, "maybe because it's in the Bible
Belt."
The operations manager at North Carolina News, a
Durham-based newspaper and magazine distribution
firm, said interest in the issue is high among retailers.
"We're increasing our allotment from 7,500 to 15,000
copies," said Bill Woodside. "It's just smart business
— we've had so many calls about it."
A representative of Duke University Stores reported
that the Bryan Center lobby shop and the East
See ACC on page 32